Sunday, September 30, 2012

Blocking key protein could halt age-related decline in immune system, study finds

ScienceDaily (Sep. 30, 2012) ? The older we get, the weaker our immune systems tend to become, leaving us vulnerable to infectious diseases and cancer and eroding our ability to benefit from vaccination. Now Stanford University School of Medicine scientists have found that blocking the action of a single protein whose levels in our immune cells creep steadily upward with age can restore those cells' response to a vaccine.

This discovery holds important long-term therapeutic ramifications, said Jorg Goronzy, MD, PhD, professor of rheumatology and immunology and the senior author of a study published online Sept. 30 in Nature Medicine. It might someday be possible, he said, to pharmacologically counter aging's effects on our immune systems.

In the study, the Stanford team fingered a protein called DUSP6 that interferes with the capacity of an important class of immune cells to respond to the presence of a foreign substance, such as those appearing on the surface of an invading pathogen or in a vaccine designed to stifle that invasion.

The researchers also identified a potential lead compound that, by inhibiting DUSP6's action, restores those cells' responsiveness to a more youthful state.

A person's immune response declines slowly but surely starting at around age 40, said Goronzy. "While 90 percent of young adults respond to most vaccines, after age 60 that response rate is down to around 40-45 percent. With some vaccines, it's as low as 20 percent." Vaccine failure among seniors poses a serious health problem: Some 90 percent of influenza deaths are among people over age 65.

A vaccine is, in essence, a "mug shot" of one or more of a pathogen's most prominent features, akin to a photo of a giant wart on a suspect's nose. This chemical snapshot -- or antigen, in scientific parlance -- is nailed into customized "frames" and displayed on the surface of "desk cop" cells specializing in signaling T cells, the "beat cops" of the immune system.

One important type of beat cop, the so-called T-helper cell, stimulates other immune cells called B cells that play a key role in our response to infection-preventing vaccines. On exposure to an antigen from a vaccine or the pathogen itself, along with appropriate interactions with T-helper cells, B cells proliferate, mature and get down to brass tacks: producing and secreting antibodies. These molecules are designed to snare and immobilize the pathogen, flagging it for incarceration and, quite likely, a death sentence meted out by still other very tough immune cells.

For poor responders, there are a few ways of increasing a vaccine's potency. One is to simply boost the dose. A second is the use of adjuvants: chemicals, or combinations of them that, like a cup of strong coffee, wake up the desk cops whose job is to display the description of the pathogen's distinguishing feature (the antigen) to the beat cops. A recently published large, multicenter study, one of whose co-authors was Cornelia Dekker, MD, professor of pediatrics (infectious disease) at Stanford, showed that adding an experimental adjuvant to the standard seasonal flu vaccine substantially improved seniors' response to the vaccine.

But just waking up the desk cops won't cut it if the beat cops are too sluggish. Older people's T-helper cells suffer from a diminished capacity to activate, proliferate and secrete crucial signaling chemicals in response to infections or vaccines. This limits even an adjuvant-containing vaccine's ability to get the job done.

"Some age-associated defect or defects raise the threshold of responsiveness to the presented antigen, so a vaccine dose that triggers T-cell activation in a younger person doesn't in an older person. Adjuvants can't compensate for these defects," Goronzy said.

So he and his team sought to identify the defects that cause this age-related sluggishness in T-helper cells, and to see how to counter them.

Circulating T-helper cells fall into two broad categories. "Na?ve" T-helper cells have never encountered an antigen before (as in the case of, say, a rare or emerging pathogen or a new vaccine), but are capable of wheeling into action once they do. It takes a week or two to reach full tilt.

"Memory" T-helper cells have previously been exposed to an antigen. These cells are long-lived and narrowly fixed on that particular antigen. They can rapidly transition to an activated state should the same antigen ever cross their path again. That's why prior exposure -- through infection or a vaccine -- renders us more resistant.

In a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study published earlier this year, Goronzy's team showed that faulty regulation in memory T-helper cells, due to aging-related increased levels of a protein called DUSP4, inhibits the activation of those cells, with their consequent failure to ignite a good B-cell (antibody-producing) response.

This time around, the investigators uncovered a similar effect with a related protein, DUSP6, on na?ve T-helper cells. In test tubes, they compared blood cells drawn from people ages 20-35 versus 70-85 in response to stimulation. In na?ve T-helper cells (but not in memory cells), there were age-associated differences in a specific chain of biochemical events involved in the cells' activation, proliferation and differentiation. Laboratory tests showed that the culprit behind the cells' fecklessness in older people was DUSP6, an enzyme that works by hacking phosphate groups off of other enzymes, thus dialing down their activity. Those "downstream" enzymes are crucial to na?ve T-helper cell activation. DUSP6 levels were much higher in older people's na?ve T-helper cells.

Further experimentation revealed that DUSP6's increase in aging na?ve T-helper cells was caused by an age-associated easing up on a brake pedal called miR-181a, one among hundreds of small molecules made of RNA (called microRNA) that regulate proteins' production. All microRNA molecules work by affixing themselves to larger protein-template RNA molecules, also made of RNA, gumming things up and stalling the procedure. Each distinct variant of microRNA molecule can bind to several different varieties of protein-prescribing RNA molecule, thereby swiftly redirecting a cell's overall behavior.

Goronzy and his colleagues saw that miR-181a directly interferes with the production of DUSP6 and noted that the amount of miRNA-181 present in na?ve T-cells declines steadily, bottoming out around age 65-70, causing levels of DUSP6 in these cells to increase with age. Artificially boosting miRNA-181a levels in na?ve human T cells caused DUSP6 levels to plummet, commensurately increasing those cells' readiness to activate on exposure to a given dose of influenza vaccine. In contrast, artificially increasing the levels of DUSP6 blocked the beneficial effects of heightened miR-181a levels.

A study conducted by University of Pittsburgh researchers and published in Nature Chemical Biology in 2009 had shown in zebrafish that a particular compound with an extremely long chemical name (abbreviated in Goronzy's study as "BCI") appeared to block DUSP6's action in certain heart cells, leading to cardiac hypertrophy. (In this case, DUSP6's proliferation-preventing function was beneficial.)

So Goronzy and his colleagues incubated blood cells from 10 60- to 85-year-old individuals with activation-stimulating molecules in the presence of increasing concentrations of BCI. The greater the BCI dose, the more evidence of na?ve T-helper cell activation they saw.

"We are still far from application in the clinic," cautioned Goronzy. "We need to keep tweaking the compound and testing it in mice to make absolutely sure it's safe enough to try in humans. But improving vaccine responses to overcome age-related immune defects represents a unique opportunity to attain healthy aging."

First authorship of the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, was shared by Guangjin Li, PhD, Mingcan Yu, PhD, and Won-Won Lee, PhD, all postdoctoral scholars in Goronzy's lab. Other Stanford co-authors were Eswar Krishnan, MD, assistant professor of medicine; and Cornelia Weyand, MD, PhD, professor of medicine.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford University Medical Center, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS. The original article was written by Bruce Goldman.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/rzjLSrogwIo/120930142113.htm

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Election's impact on Supreme Court (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/252170202?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Police say gunman kills 4, himself at Minn. office

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ? A gunman killed four people inside a Minneapolis sign-making business before turning the weapon on himself, authorities said early Friday.

Officers summoned Thursday afternoon by a 911 call discovered the victims' bodies shortly after arriving at Accent Signage Systems Inc., located in a residential area in the city's north side, according to a statement from police spokesman Sgt. Stephen McCarty.

"When officers arrived and entered the business to assist with the evacuation of employees, give aid to the victims and to search for the suspect, they found four victims dead from apparent gunshot wounds," the statement said.

Four other people were wounded, including three critically.

No details were released about the gunman, other than he was found dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

During a news conference Thursday night, Minneapolis Police Deputy Chief Kris Arneson wouldn't specify how many people had been killed, saying only that "several" victims were found dead inside. She said police never fired at the gunman, but she didn't release other details ? including the gunman's possible motive or whether he had worked at the company.

Hennepin County Medical Center was treating the four patients, including three men in critical condition, according to a hospital spokeswoman. The fourth victim suffered minor injuries, police said.

None of the victims' names has been released.

Someone from inside the building called 911 around 4:30 p.m. to report the shootings, police said. The first officers on the scene quickly began evacuating people from the business and closed off several blocks.

Dozens of squad cars and SWAT officers swarmed the neighborhood Thursday afternoon, and traffic was stopped on a nearby bridge along Penn Avenue, where officers had rifles drawn and pointed at the business and a park below.

By Thursday evening, police vehicles were still surrounding the business. People from the neighborhood milled around but deputies kept them back.

Marques Jones, 18, of Minneapolis, said he was outside a building down the street having his high school senior pictures taken when he and his photographer heard gunfire that sounded close.

"We heard about four to five gunshots," Jones said. "We were shocked at what happened and we just looked at each other. We all just took off running to our vehicles."

According to Accent Signage Systems' website, the company makes interior signage and lists its founder as Reuven Rahamim. A phone messages left at the business was not immediately returned, and a woman who answered the phone at Rahamim's residential listing declined comment.

The company employed 28 people as of July, according to a feature on the business in Finance & Commerce, a local business publication. The paper reported that U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce Francisco Sanchez visited it in August in a trip focused on exporting and praised the company for its innovation.

The company developed a patented technology for producing signs in Braille and had licensed the technology to companies in 38 countries, the newspaper said.

Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak said employees who were working when the shootings occurred were together and being cared for Thursday evening.

"We are deeply sorry about what has happened here," he said, calling the shootings "a horrible tragedy."

___

Associated Press writers Doug Glass and Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis, and Barbara Rodriguez, Erin Gartner and M. David Nichols in Chicago contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-gunman-kills-4-himself-minn-office-070631516.html

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Big Sean's New Album Title Will Join Hall Of Fame

'When you got the mic, you got the crowd, you gotta say something, or else your moment in time is wasted,' Big Sean tells MTV News about second LP.
By Rob Markman


Big Sean
Photo: Neilson Barnard/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1694570/big-sean-hall-of-fame-album.jhtml

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Top Dems Tell Tax Law Writers: Start With Romney's IRA | TPMDC

Top Democrats are pushing tax writers in both the House and Senate to close the tax loopholes that likely allowed Mitt Romney to use a savings vehicle for middle class workers to build a nearly $100 million retirement fortune.

Romney?s financial disclosures have famously revealed that his tax-deferred individual retirement account holds upwards of $100 million, an uncomfortable demonstration of enormous wealth, but moreover a source of key ethical questions.

IRAs were designed to allow workers to nest away modest sums of money each year, tax deferred, to finance a middle class retirement. There?s even a legal limit ? now $6,000 ? on how much each IRA holder can contribute annually.

Romney?s managed to amass more than 100,000 times that much.

So early last month, Reps. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), George Miller (D-CA) and Sander Levin (D-MI) wrote to the Treasury and Labor departments to make an example of Romney. They asked federal tax officials to explain whether the tax strategy Romney likely used to mushroom his IRA ? circumventing the contribution limit by undervaluing assets ? is legal, how much revenue it costs the U.S. treasury each year, and whether it should be forbidden.

In response, Mark Mazur, assistant treasury secretary for tax policy, said the scope of the problem remains unknown, but the government knows it exists and is examining ways to curb the practice.

?[T]he IRS has pursued these issues diligently and last year convened a working group to study ways of improving compliance and enforcement in this area,? Mazur wrote. ?The group will consider whether any statutory changes would be helpful to this effort.?

Miller and Van Hollen see that as a jumping off point ? both to bring Romney?s IRA back into the political spotlight, but also for tax law writers, who will be forced to address this and similar loopholes if and when they overhaul the tax code next year.

?[T]he Internal Revenue Service is currently studying ways to prevent abuse of tax-preferred individual retirement accounts (IRAS) for tax evasion purposes,? the Democrats wrote to the chairs and ranking members of the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee. ?We encourage you to consider this particular area of law as Congress considers tax reform legislation or other legislation that would address the fiscal cliff in a balanced way.?

2012, 2012 Presidential Election, 2012 elections, Chris Van Hollen, Dave Camp, George Miller, Max Baucus, Mitt Romney, Orrin Hatch, Sander Levin, Taxes
Brian Beutler

Brian Beutler is TPM's senior congressional reporter. Since 2009, he's led coverage of health care reform, Wall Street reform, taxes, the GOP budget, the government shutdown fight, and the debt limit fight. He can be reached at brian@talkingpointsmemo.com.

Source: http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/09/dem-lawmakers-make-example-of-romney-enormous-ira.php

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Akin Nostalgic for a More 'Ladylike' McCaskill

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Oil prices rise after 3 days of declines

NEW YORK (AP) ? The price of oil is up more than $2 per barrel after three straight days of declines as weekly unemployment claims in the United States fell to their lowest level in two months.

Benchmark oil gained $2.09 to $92.07 per barrel just after 1 p.m. Eastern time. The last time crude settled with a bigger gain was Aug. 3.

The Labor Department said the number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits plunged 26,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 359,000, the lowest level in nine weeks. Weekly unemployment applications are a measure of the pace of layoffs. Any sign of an improving economy can drive energy prices up.

The market gains started earlier in Asia, helped by expectations the People's Bank of China will soon take more steps to stimulate the world's No. 2 economy.

Oil has dropped $9 per barrel in the last two weeks following the announcement of new economic stimulus measures by the Federal Reserve.

The price of gasoline fell a penny to $3.795 a gallon, according to AAA, Wright Express and the Oil Price Information Service. It's down about 4 cents from a month ago.

Brent crude, which is used to price international varieties of oil, gained $2.11 to $112.15 on the ICE Futures Exchange in London.

In other trading:

? Heating oil rose 5 cents to $3.15 per gallon.

? Wholesale gasoline gained 4 cents to $2.92 per gallon.

? Natural gas added 8 cents to $3.29 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oil-prices-rise-3-days-declines-142246579--finance.html

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Madonna says she was being "ironic" in calling Obama a Muslim

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/madonna-urges-americans-support-obama-d-c-concert-003203401.html

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Group Accuses Federal Judge of Delaying Release of Chevron Documents

The Amazon Defense Coalition is accusing a U.S. federal judge in San Francisco of deliberately delaying the release of documents that would help in the judicial proceedings in Ecuador against the oil and natural gas giant, Chevron. Here are the details.

* According to a press release this week by the Amazon Defense Coalition, Federal Magistrate Judge Nathanael Cousins was asked by rainforest villagers in Ecaudor to force Chevron and the Mason Investigative Group to release hundred of pages of material regarding an alleged scheme to bribe an Ecuadorian judge.

* The group is claiming that a Chevron operative was paid more than $2 million to keep quiet about the videotaped attempts to bribe the judge and says the company hired several law firms to try to persuade Cousins to block the release of the documents.

* Amazon Defense Coalition spokesperson Karen Hinton stated that the Republic of Ecuador, represented by U.S. law firm Winston & Strawn, requested the release of the documents in March 2011. In August of 2011, a Northern California District Judge ordered Chevrom and the Mason Group to produce the documents.

* Chevron and the Mason Group are claiming most of the documents are privileged, Hinton stated, and Judge Cousins has been ordered to review them.

* Chevron denies that it is responsible for environmental and social harms in the Amazon. "Chevron has never conducted oil production operations in Ecuador, and its subsidiary Texaco Petroleum Co. ('TexPet') fully remediated its share of environmental impacts arising from oil production operations prior to 1992," the company stated in a fact sheet about the Ecuador lawsuit.

* In a case that has been ongoing for decades, an Ecuadorian judge ruled against Chevron and awarded more a judgement of more than $18 billion in 2011. An appellate court sided with that judgement in January, despite "Chevron's appeal on the grounds that the ruling lacked scientific merit and that it ignores overwhelming evidence of fraud and misconduct," the company stated.

* Chevron continues to fight the judgment, which has been suspended by an order from the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague until claims that were brought against Ecuador regarding violations of interneational law are resolved.

* "After an eight-year trial," Hinton stated, "Chevron in 2011 was found liable for deliberately dumping billions of gallons of toxic waste into Amazon waterways and forests to save on production costs. Evidence before the court showed the contamination caused an outbreak of cancer and decimated indigenous groups."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/group-accuses-federal-judge-delaying-release-chevron-documents-213500598.html

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Fruit Snacks Buoyed by Health and Wellness Trend, but Special ...

IStock_000002539901XSmallAnalyst Insight By Ewa Hudson, Global Head of Health and Wellness Research

Euromonitor International's latest packaged food data shows that fruit snacks are among the best-performing categories in sweet and savoury snacks. By the end of 2012, on a global level, fruit snacks are projected to have made value gains of just over 5%, compared to chips/crisps' 3% and the 4% growth trajectory currently being recorded for tortilla/corn chips and extruded snacks. Overall, sweet and savoury snacks is heading for a 4% global value sales increase in 2012, marking out fruit snacks as a definite growth driver.

In Asia Pacific, fruit snacks are leading the pack with a projected 13% value increase for 2012, and in Latin America they top the growth charts with a deeply impressive 20%. The category's notable performance in Latin America is in great part down to PepsiCo's Natuchips brand, which accounts for almost half of regional value sales (US$20 million) in 2012. The brand leads in major markets like Colombia and Venezuela, and has a presence in several others in the region.

The healthy snack conundrum

The runaway success of PepsiCo's Natuchips in Latin America is not entirely down to their healthiness, at least not in absolute terms. Instead of potato or corn, this product is largely based on plantain (yucca and other starchy root variants also exist), which counts as an important carbohydrate staple food in this geography. Like a standard potato chip product, Natuchips are fried in oil. As a result, weight for weight, Natuchips contains almost as much fat and calories as its sister brand's Lay's Original Potato chips. However, besides successfully leveraging their advantage as a traditional, regionally popular food, plantain chips do benefit from being perceived as a healthier, more nutritious alternative to conventional potato chips.

Considering that the health consciousness of the Latin American consumer base is constantly increasing, one might assume that BFY reduced-fat versions of this product would soon rise to major prominence in the region. But caution is advised.

Healthy snacks, and BFY variants of fried snacks in particular, require intensive research and development investment, followed by much dedication to keep them on retailers' shelves. They also tend to offer much lower returns compared to their conventional mass market snack food counterparts.

For example, PepsiCo decided to withdraw its Lay's Flat Earth Baked Veggie Crisps (a low-fat extruded snack product) from the US market in 2009 after just two years, due to sales volume falling far short of what the company had envisioned. Euromonitor International health and wellness data shows that, despite widespread and long-standing availability, reduced-fat sweet and savoury snacks account for just 5% of overall sweet and savoury snack value sales in North America in 2010 despite heavy investment and promotion.

Planned vs. impulse snacking

Healthy snacks, regardless of profitability issues, are an important part of major players' product portfolios, because companies' reputations do not only rest on the success of their blockbuster brands, but are also built on snack manufacturers' willingness to engage with problematic health issues, such as rising global obesity levels. Consumers appreciate these offerings, even if they do not generate a following equivalent to that of their far more calorific equivalents.

Precise targeting and realistic sales expectations are key. The fact that snack food products are primarily an impulse purchase is an important consideration. When people get hungry, health concerns are quickly forgotten; a pack of deep fried, golden corn chips tends to look at lot more appealing than dried apple rings. Furthermore, for many consumers, whether they try to eat healthily the rest of the time or not, the act of snacking is intimately linked with the enjoyment of indulgence.

One way to counteract hunger-induced poor snacking choices is to promote the concept of planned snacking. If a healthy fruit snack becomes a staple component of someone's packed lunch, or takes up permanent residency in their car's glove compartment for on-the-road snacking, then a health conscious consumer will be far less tempted to visit the next petrol station for calorie-laden indulgences at the spur of the moment.

Promoting healthy fruit snacks on a planned snacking platform means that they need to be available in multi-pack format. However, because consumers will want to try a product before they can be expected to commit themselves to bulk purchases, adequate availability of single packs has to remain part of the strategy, as do in-store tastings and promotions.

Children's snack market expands

Another core target group for fruit snack products is, of course, children. Generally, parents want their children to eat healthily, and also, in the wake of the childhood obesity crisis, many schools in a growing number of countries, including the US, the UK and Mexico, have banned the sale of unhealthy snack foods from their premises, increasing the potential for these products significantly.

The number of fruit-based snack foods aimed at children is on the increase, with some interesting innovations evident. UK-based newcomer Nim's Fruit Crisps, for example, which started trading in October 2011, specialises in air-dried fruit crisps made from entire fruits (whenever possible), including skins, cores and pips. This way, according to the company, the product retains most of the nutritional value of the original fruit.

The Nim's Fruit Crips range includes Apple & Strawberry, Pineapple & Mango, Orange & Melon, Apple & Kiwi and Pear & Kiwi, with new varieties being developed. The products are free of additives, which heightens their parental appeal. A range of child-targeted products is planned for the end of October 2012. The new line will concentrate on single-flavour products ? a strategy geared towards bringing the products' price point in line with those of other snacks commonly purchased from school kiosks and vending machines.

Private label is also shaping this trend. Sainsbury's, The UK's third-ranking grocery retailer in 2011, launched a range of fruit-based snacks targeted at children, including Bite Sized Apricots, Juicy Blueberries, Fairtrade Strawberry and Lemon Flavour Raisins in August 2012. The snacks come in convenient, highly portable mini packs.

Driving growth in the global sweet and savoury snacks market, fruit snacks are clearly on the ascent, but it is important to remain realistic. BFY variants of deep fried plantain in Latin America, for instance, are unlikely to turn into mass market triumph in terms of displacing standard fried offerings, but that does not mean that crunchy, baked variants will not be successful in their own right if promoted on a planned snack platform geared towards health conscious adults or at children purchasing their break-time snacks in a health-focused school environment.

?

Source: http://blog.euromonitor.com/2012/09/fruit-snacks-buoyed-by-health-and-wellness-trend-but-special-attention-required-.html

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Obama at the UN, in shadow of campaign politics

President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One upon his arrival, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, at JFK airport in New York. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One upon his arrival, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, at JFK airport in New York. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

The Marine One helicopter, with President Barack Obama aboard, lands at the Wall Street heliport in New York, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama appear on the ABC Television show ?The View? in New York, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama arrives at JFK International Airport in New York, Monday, Sept. .24, 2012. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano)

(AP) ? Campaign politics shadowing every word, President Barack Obama will step before the world and declare that anti-American rage and riots among Muslims abroad will never force the United States to backtrack on diplomacy.

In his final international address before the November election, Obama on Tuesday has a United Nations stage afforded to presidents, not presidential challengers. He will use it to try to boost his political standing without mentioning his opponent.

Obama's comments to the General Assembly will be scrutinized around the globe and by the gathering of presidents and prime ministers in the famed United Nations hall, given the tumult, terrorism, nuclear threats and poverty that bind so many nations. He will respond to unrest in the Muslim world and seek to underscore U.S. resolve in keeping Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.

Yet, were there any doubt that the U.S. presidential campaign hung heavy over Obama's speech to the General Assembly, Republican rival Mitt Romney shredded it by assailing Obama's foreign affairs leadership on the eve of the president's speech.

"This is time for a president who will shape events in the Middle East, not just be merciful or be at the mercy of the events," Romney said Monday. Focusing on the killing of the U.S. ambassador in Libya and mass bloodshed in Syria, Romney repeatedly ridiculed Obama's comment that nations moving toward democracy after the Arab Spring face "bumps in the road."

That prompted White House spokesman Jay Carney to fire back at Romney: "There is a certain rather desperate attempt to grasp at words and phrases here to find political advantage, and in this case that's profoundly offensive."

Obama's activities at the United Nations said plenty, too: There are not many of them. Campaigning is his imperative.

He is skipping the private meetings with key allies that a U.S. president typically schedules when the whole international community comes to New York. The president will spend only 24 hours in New York in total this time, and he spent some of it Monday to appear on "The View," giving a talk show interview intended to sell his election pitch to a big TV audience.

The dominant theme of Obama's U.N. speech, according to his aides and Obama's own recent words, will be to underscore his response to the protests raging in places across the Middle East and North Africa. As he has for days, Obama will condemn the violence, defend democratic principles of free speech and promise no U.S. withdrawal of outreach.

Much of the growing ire is aimed at the United States because of an anti-Islam film produced in this country, but the White House has now deemed the attack on its consulate in Libya a "terrorist attack" and has not ruled that it was premeditated. Four Americans, including ambassador Chris Stevens, died in what Obama now says "wasn't just a mob action."

Obama noted in the TV interview Monday that many Libyans have protested the extremist strains in their nation.

"Part of the message for us is that the overwhelming majority of Muslims, they want the same things that families here want," Obama said. "They want opportunity. They want jobs. They want peace. ... We're going to stay engaged. Because ultimately, over the long term, our security is going to be tied up with the success of these countries."

In a preview of Obama's speech, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton appealed for Muslims to show "dignity" as they protest the film denigrating the Prophet Muhammad.

"Dignity does not come from avenging insults," she said in a speech to her husband's Clinton Global Initiative. Romney and Obama were to speak there as well on Tuesday.

The secretary of state was also standing in for Obama. She saw the presidents of Afghanistan, Egypt, Libya and Pakistan. She was due later in the week to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.

For U.S. presidents, the yearly United Nations address is always laced with domestic politics even though the speeches are scripted without campaign references. Wars and the failed attempts at Mideast peace have dominated in recent years.

Romney's campaign made the campaign linkage directly Monday.

"On the eve of his United Nations address, President Obama's foreign policy is in disarray," spokesman Ryan Williams said. "As president, Mitt Romney will repair our relationships abroad and create a safer, more secure nation."

Polling shows Obama has a clear edge over Romney when voters are asked who they think is a stronger leader and would better protect the country.

__

Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this story.

__

Follow Ben Feller at http://www.twitter.com/benfellerdc

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-09-25-Obama/id-f03670854a7444b38911cc633ef000fa

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Novel materials become multifunctional at ultimate quantum limit

ScienceDaily (Sep. 25, 2012) ? A University of Arkansas physicist and his colleagues have examined the lower limits of novel materials called complex oxides and discovered that unlike conventional semiconductors the materials not only conduct electricity, but also develop unusual magnetic properties.

Jak Chakhalian, Jian Liu, Derek Meyers and Benjamin Gray of the University of Arkansas and John W. Freeland and Phillip Ryan of the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory present their ideas in Physical Review Letters.

"Contrary to what we have today in modern microelectronics devices based on silicon, here in a single quantum well, which is just four nanometers thick, we now have several functionalities in one device layer," said Chakhalian, professor of physics and holder of the Charles and Clydene Scharlau Chair in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences. "Engineers can use this class of material to devise new multifunctional devices based on the electrons' spin."

The microelectronic materials -- semiconductors -- used in today's computers, have almost reached the lower limitation for size and functionality. Computers run on several semiconducting devices layered together in the very smallest of spaces, known as quantum wells, where nanoscale layers of a semiconducting material are sandwiched between two nanoscale layers of a non-conducting material. However, the researchers found that by using complex oxides with correlated electrons confined to quantum well geometry, they added a new dimension to the mix.

The new structure is based on the concept of correlated charge carriers, like those found in rust, or iron oxide. In rust, if one electron does something, all of the other electrons "know" about it. This phenomenon, called correlated electrons, does not exist in silicon-based materials that run today's computers, televisions, complex medical equipment,power cell phones and keep the electricity on in homes.

"In normal materials used today, electrons don't care about the movement of one another," Chakhalian said. "We can predict their properties almost on the 'back of an envelope' with the help of powerful computers." However, with correlated materials, the calculations for the movement of one electron involve tracking the interactions with billions of electrons, and this is beyond modern theory capabilities.

Chakhalian and his colleagues went down to four atomic layers of a correlated complex oxide material based on nickel and sandwiched it in between two layers of non-conducting oxide material based on aluminum. Unlike the semiconducting materials, the complex oxide structure revealed the unexpected presence of both electronic and magnetic properties.

These multiple properties in a single material may allow the semiconductor industry to push the limits of current conventional computers and develop multiple functions for a single device, possibly allowing everyday electronics to become smaller and faster than they are today.

Chakhalian is a professor in the Institute for Nanoscience and Engineering.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/VKAwoWOV_ig/120925091346.htm

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Monday, September 24, 2012

PHOTOS: 'Dancing with the Stars' All-Star Cast Suits Up!

Sequins, spray tans and stilettos, oh my! As the Dancing with the Stars' all-star season kicks off tonight, check out the cast as they pose with their new partners and look ready to hit the dance floor!

 

 

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/dancing-stars-all-star-cast-season-15/1-b-476518?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Adancing-stars-all-star-cast-season-15-476518

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NBA Sunday: Jamario Moon Wants To Join Hawks

When the Atlanta Hawks open training camp next week they will do so without a familiar face manning the small forward position. Marvin Williams, the team?s full-time starting small forward since the 2007 season, was dealt to the Utah Jazz in July in exchange for former All-Star guard Devin Harris.

Williams was a key part of the Hawks? current five season playoff appearance streak, but was much maligned in Atlanta for failing to live up to his status as the No. 2 overall pick in the 2005 draft after being selected ahead of All-Star guards Chris Paul and Deron Williams.

The departure of Williams has left the Hawks with a gaping hole at small forward entering training camp.

President of basketball operations and general manager Danny Ferry has been on the hunt for a defensive minded wing player and there is a veteran forward who would like an opportunity to earn a spot on the team?s opening night roster.

Free agent forward Jamario Moon believes he?s the logical choice to help fill the small forward void and clearly makes it known the Hawks are an organization he?d like to play for in 2012-13.

?Atlanta makes sense to me,? Moon told HOOPSWORLD on where he would fit best. ?Danny was the general manager when I was playing for Cleveland and [Hawks assistant general manager] Wes Wilcox was there too. They already know me and what I bring. It just makes sense.?

As the Hawks? roster is currently constructed possible replacements for Williams include Kyle Korver, James Anderson and Damion James. Korver is a knockdown long range marksman but he?s probably best suited to play shooting guard. Anderson and James are both 2010 draft picks who have yet to consistently crack a team?s nightly rotation since entering the league.

Moon has career averages of 6.3 points and 4.3 rebounds on 46 percent shooting in 286 games over five seasons. In 157 career starts, Moon has averaged 7.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 1.1 blocks per game.

The veteran forward has been working out in Atlanta during the offseason and says he?s ready to get back on the court and is in great shape.

?All they have to do is give me a call,? Moon said. ?I?m ready to work and do whatever the coaching staff asks of me.?

Moon has played with the Toronto Raptors, Miami HEAT, Cleveland Cavaliers and most recently the Charlotte Bobcats. The Bobcats waived him in early July, making him an unrestricted free agent.

With all of the changes the Hawks have made to their roster since the end of last season, Moon believes the team still has the talent to compete at a high level.

?The team is young and athletic,? Moon said. ?I like the direction they?re heading.?

The Hawks currently have fifteen players signed, but the contracts of both Anderson and James are non-guaranteed for the 2012-13 campaign.

Utah Jazz?s Gordon Hayward Seeking Starting Role In 2013?

The Utah Jazz feature four players on their active roster who were selected as lottery picks over the past two years. Second year forward Gordon Hayward is one of those players and one his goals for 2012-13 is to earn a starting spot with the team.

?You want to start for the team, and you want to make sure you?re the one out there on the court getting as many minutes as you can,? Hayward told Brian Smith of the Salt Lake Tribune.

The Jazz acquired veteran forward Marvin Williams this past summer from the Atlanta Hawks in exchange for guard Devin Harris. Williams is an established starter who has logged heavy playoff minutes during his career, while Hayward showed promise by averaging 11.8 points, 3.5 rebounds and 3.1 assists during his rookie campaign last season.

The two will be expected to battle for minutes at small forward once the Jazz open training camp next week.

?In training camp, there?s going to be some competition going on,? Hayward said. ?That?ll just further benefit all of our games and make us better as a team.?

Hayward reportedly struggled with confidence early on in his rookie season but after averaging 16.7 points on 49 percent shooting from three-point range in April (last 13 games) the former Butler University standout knows he belongs in the league.

?I?ve shown that I belong in the league?, Hayward said. And it?s something that you work for and you work towards, and now I know that I belong ? and now you push yourself even further.?

The Jazz finished last season 36-30 and reached the playoffs before being eliminated by the San Antonio Spurs in the first round. Hayward averaged 7.8 points in the postseason and shot just 18 percent from the floor, which likely drove the front office to acquire Williams for added depth on the wing.

Can Philadelphia 76ers?Center Spencer Hawes?Truly Play Power Forward?

Philadelphia 76ers head coach Doug Collins has maintained all throughout the offseason that he was going to use center Spencer Hawes more at the power forward spot, but when the team acquired All-Star Andrew Bynum the talk became more viable.

To Hawes? credit he believes he can indeed log minutes at power forward despite a perceived disadvantage guarding smaller opponents.

?I don?t think it?s a huge challenge,? Hawes told John Mitchell of the Philadelphia Inquirer. ?I?ve guarded the four a lot. Offensively, the way we?ve done it, the four and the five are pretty interchangeable. I don?t think the transition will be overwhelming.?

Hawes signed a two-year deal in free agency to remain with the 76ers and the club also signed well-traveled big man Kwame Brown. But with Bynum now in the fold, the need for both to be flexible in the frontcourt is clear.

?The bottom line is we?re all going to have to show more versatility, and that?s a good thing,? Hawes said. ?In the course of a long season it?s good to have guys that can play different positions and fill different needs. Of course, you don?t really know how it?s all going to work out until you get on the floor. But the main thing is that the guys we brought in are unselfish. That?s something that bodes well when you are introducing so many different pieces.?

HOOPSWORLD?s 2012-13 Philadelphia 76ers season preview can be found by accessing this LINK.

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Video: ?It was an execution?



>>> the growing instances of afghan troops and police turning their guns on their american partners has not only threatened to undermine the american mission here, it is also only added more worry and pain back home for those who now see their loved ones threatened from inside and out. before leaving the states, i spent time with one family left both anguished and angry by the manner in which their son died. when their son shipped out to war, like many parents, deep down, the buckleys feared it could end with a knock at the door and those excruciating words no one forgets.

>> i'm sorry to inform you that your son, lance corporal buckley passed away. yesterday in afghanistan.

>> lance corporal greg buckley jr. was killed just days before he was supposed to come home. the 21-year-old and two fellow marines were shot to death while working out in a gym. the military calls them green on blue, or insider attacks. mr. buckley has his own word.

>> it was an execution.

>> since the start of the year, at least 51 american and allied troops have been killed in insider attacks, at first written off mostly because of personal grudges, in recent weeks, the military has come to realize a dangerous pattern and has hit the pause button on many afghan-u.s. operations. who are you angry at?

>> the government, they dropped the ball.

>> that's because greg buckley says they should have done more to protect his son from afghan training partners who were becoming increasinge e.

>> dear, mom, dad.

>> his mother still clings to the words of one of greg 's last letters homes.

>> you know i love you more than any person.

>> a letter which eerily sounds like a good bbygoodbye.

>> you'll always be my mother and the queen of everything. i don't know how to go on with my life without him.

>> the buckleys wall is still covered by tributes left by neighbors and strangers. and at a recent high school football game, the city became one of the many american cities to honor their fallen.

>> my son is asking me to speak out. he doesn't want to see anymore kids die the way he died.

>> reporter: his dad admits he was against his son joining the marines but is immensely proud of him. but he wasn't sure that greg fully understood the cost of war. but this was a price that no one was prepared to paid.

>> anything that happened on that battlefield, i could accept it. i would be heart broken.

>> since the start of the year, more than 50 afghans have been killed by fellow afghan security force members. we'll

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49141693/

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AP Exclusive: Neglect ruins Marcos' prized shoes

In this photo taken Sept. 19, 2012, a branded high heel shoe, once worn by flamboyant former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos, sits among equally-damaged shoes in a section of the National Museum in Manila, Philippine. Termites, storms and government neglect have damaged some of Imelda Marcos's legendary stash of shoes, expensive gowns and other vanity possessions, which were left to oblivion after she and her dictator husband were driven to U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

In this photo taken Sept. 19, 2012, a branded high heel shoe, once worn by flamboyant former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos, sits among equally-damaged shoes in a section of the National Museum in Manila, Philippine. Termites, storms and government neglect have damaged some of Imelda Marcos's legendary stash of shoes, expensive gowns and other vanity possessions, which were left to oblivion after she and her dictator husband were driven to U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

In this photo taken Sept. 19, 2012, branded high heel shoes, once worn by flamboyant former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos, sit among equally-damaged shoes and bags in a section of the National Museum in Manila, Philippine. Termites, storms and government neglect have damaged some of Imelda Marcos's legendary stash of shoes, expensive gowns and other vanity possessions, which were left to oblivion after she and her dictator husband were driven to U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

In this photo taken Sept. 19, 2012, native Filipino attire called "Barongs" which had been often worn in public during the two-decade rule of the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos, is revealed from a section of the National Museum in Manila, Philippines. Termites, storms and government neglect have damaged hundreds of pieces of Marcos' "barongs" as well as former first lady Imelda Marcos's legendary stash of shoes, expensive gowns and other vanity possessions, which were left to oblivion after she and her dictator husband were driven to U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

In this photo taken Sept. 19, 2012, native Filipino attire called "Barongs" which had been often worn in public during the two-decade rule of the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos, is revealed from a section of the National Museum in Manila, Philippines. Termites, storms and government neglect have damaged hundreds of pieces of Marcos' "barongs" as well as former first lady Imelda Marcos's legendary stash of shoes, expensive gowns and other vanity possessions, which were left to oblivion after she and her dictator husband were driven to U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

In this photo taken Sept. 19, 2012, branded high heel shoes, once worn by flamboyant former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos sit among equally-damaged shoes and bags in a section of the National Museum in Manila, Philippine. Termites, storms and government neglect have damaged some of Imelda Marcos's legendary stash of shoes, expensive gowns and other vanity possessions, which were left to oblivion after she and her dictator husband were driven to U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

MANILA, Philippines (AP) ? Termites, storms and neglect have damaged part of former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos' legendary collection of shoes and other possessions left behind after she and her dictator husband were driven into U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt.

Hundreds of pieces of late strongman Ferdinand Marcos' clothing, including the formal native see-through barong shirts he wore during his two-decade rule, have also begun to gather mold and fray after being stored for years without protection at the presidential palace and later at Manila's National Museum, officials told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The Marcoses fled the Philippines at the climax of an army-backed "people power" revolt which became a harbinger of change in authoritarian regimes worldwide. Ferdinand Marcos died in exile in Hawaii in 1989 and his widow and children returned home years later.

They left behind staggering amounts of personal belongings, clothes and art objects at the palace, including at least 1,220 pairs of Imelda Marcos' shoes.

More than 150 cartons of clothes, dress accessories and shoes of the Marcoses were transferred to the National Museum for safekeeping two years ago after termites, humidity and mold threatened the apparel at the riverside palace. They deteriorated further at the museum after the fragile boxes were abandoned in a padlocked hall that had no facilities to protect such relics and was inundated by tropical rains last month due to a gushing leak in the ceiling, museum officials said.

Museum staffers, who were not aware the boxes contained precious mementoes from the Marcoses, opened the hall on the fourth floor of the building after noticing water pouring out from under the door. They were shocked to see Marcos' shoes and gowns when they opened the wet boxes, officials said.

Workers hurriedly moved the boxes to a dry room and some were later brought to a museum laboratory, where a small team of curators scrambled to assess the extent of the damage, a process that may take months given the huge volume of the apparel. Some items have been damaged by termites and mold beyond repair, according to museum curator Orlando Abinion, who is heading the effort.

"We're doing a conservation rescue," Abinion told the AP. "There was termite infestation and mold in past years, and these were aggravated by last month's storm."

"It's unfortunate because Imelda may have worn some of these clothes in major official events and as such have an important place in our history," he said.

AP journalists saw a badly tattered box at the museum filled with damaged and soiled leather bags and designer shoes belonging to Imelda Marcos. Termites had damaged the heel and sole of a white Pierre Cardin shoe. Other shoes were warped out of shape or badly stained.

About 100 of Ferdinand Marcos' barong shirts were squeezed tightly into another box, some still attached to plastic hangers. A white barong shirt on top, with the presidential seal emblazoned on its pocket, had reddish stains and a sleeve was nearly torn off.

Imelda Marcos, now a member of the House of Representatives, was not immediately available for comment Sunday.

Her massive shoe collection, including top U.S. and European brands, astounded the world and became a symbol of excess in the Southeast Asian nation, where many still walked barefoot out of abject poverty.

Ferdinand Marcos' successor, democracy icon Corazon Aquino, accused him of stealing billions of dollars during his 20-year rule and ordered many of his assets seized.

The clothes and shoes of the Marcoses were not among the assets allegedly stolen by them and sequestered by the government following the dictator's fall, according to Presidential Commission on Good Government official Maita Gonzaga. The government has so far recovered $2.24 billion worth of cash, bank accounts and prime real estate from the Marcoses and their cronies, she said.

After the 1986 revolt, Aquino had Imelda Marcos' shoes displayed at the presidential palace as a symbol of the former first lady's lavish lifestyle. The shoes were then removed from public view and stored in the palace basement when Aquino stepped down in 1992.

Mrs. Marcos once claimed most of her foreign-branded shoes were fake, though that has never been independently verified. But the world's fascination with her footwear, including a battery-operated pair that blinked when she danced, has ensured a hefty price tag. A 1990 U.S. charity auction of one pair donated by her fetched $10,000.

Imelda Marcos claimed many of the shoes were gifts from Filipino shoemakers in suburban Marikina city, the country's shoemaking capital. Marikina officials borrowed 800 pairs of her shoes in 2001 for a shoe museum, which has become a tourist spot.

Unapologetic about the past, Mrs. Marcos said her shoes became her best defense.

"They went into my closets looking for skeletons, but thank God, all they found were shoes, beautiful shoes," she told reporters when she inaugurated the shoe museum.

Massive flooding, however, damaged dozens of pairs of Marcos' shoes in Marikina in 2009.

About 765 pairs, including famous brands like Gucci, Charles Jourdan, Christian Dior, Ferragamo, Chanel and Prada, survived the Marikina floods. The shoes, size 8 1/2 to 9, still look remarkably new due to meticulous museum care, which includes displaying them in airtight and dust-free glass cabinets in an air-conditioned gallery, away from direct sunlight. The shoe collection draws a daily crowd of 50 to 100 Philippine and foreign tourists, who almost always leave in awe, museum manager Jane Ballesteros said.

"The first word they utter is 'Wow,' followed by the question, 'Was she able to wear all of these?'" Ballesteros said. "When I say, yes, look at the scratches on the soles, the next reaction is, 'Really?'"

"It's amusing," Ballesteros said. "Her shoes never fail to astound people years after."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-09-23-Philippines-Imelda's%20Shoes/id-55b345e57d784f36a3e2655a6df434a4

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